Fri Jan 24, 2014 12:08 am
Michel Lemieux wrote:Speaking of the original birdcage corsair that was in NZ a few years ago....where is it now?
Fri Jan 24, 2014 7:06 am
Fri Jan 24, 2014 9:59 am
steve dickey wrote:Michel Lemieux wrote:Speaking of the original birdcage corsair that was in NZ a few years ago....where is it now?
Brazil;
http://www.warbirdregistry.org/corsairregistry/f4u-17995.html
Fri Jan 24, 2014 11:19 am
JohnTerrell wrote:steve dickey wrote:Michel Lemieux wrote:Speaking of the original birdcage corsair that was in NZ a few years ago....where is it now?
Brazil;
http://www.warbirdregistry.org/corsairregistry/f4u-17995.html
And it wasn't fitted with the birdcage canopy originally - rather it, and the scallop windows behind, were only added when the aircraft was restored.
Fri Jan 24, 2014 11:48 am
Warbird Kid wrote:JohnTerrell wrote:
And it wasn't fitted with the birdcage canopy originally - rather it, and the scallop windows behind, were only added when the aircraft was restored.
Thats what I've been lead to believe. The TAM Brazil example was originally an F4U-1A (1st Blown Bubble Canopy with braces). Then when it was restored it was converted to a F4U-1 Birdcage. Then the POF example is a true F4U-1 Birdcage thats been updated to a F4U-1A. Someones gotta fix these at the same time!
Fri Jan 24, 2014 11:57 am
Mon Sep 15, 2014 11:04 am
Mon Sep 15, 2014 11:16 am
Mon Sep 15, 2014 1:20 pm
Dana Bell wrote:Sorry to be late to the dance, but I just came across this question a few minutes ago. I'm new to WIX, but I've been researching Corsairs for a couple of years for two new books, and I can explain what you saw on Marine's Dream.
The Corsair was built to be as light as possible, but this meant the aluminum turn-over structure behind the pilot was prone to collapse whenever the aircraft flipped over on landing. Since ground loops and overturns were common, several pilots died in aircraft with relatively little damage - they could be crushed beneath the aircraft, or the armor plate could tear free and slam against their skulls.
A new, window-free turtleback was needed, but the need for more Corsairs delayed the introduction of that feature to the production line. In the interim, North Island created the fix you see in the Marine's Dream photos: some internal bracing was added, as was an internal hold-back structure for the armor plate, the rear-view windows were removed and replaced with formed aluminum structures, and a piece of heavy-gauge aluminum sheet was fitted to the spine (partially overlapping the rear view window inserts.
The rig was fairly common, but I still would have expected to see far more aircraft modified this way - espicially considering the danger to Corsair pilots in unmodified aircraft.
The armor plate was replaced in a separate change order - the pilot's head was far too exposed to gunfire with the original plate, as was his left arm (on the throttle). The new armor could be added at the same time as the roll-over modification, or later, or even on aircraft without the mod - as one poster here noted, completely blocking the view through the rear vision tunnels.
There are an amazing number of new details turning up on the Corsair - but I'd better get back to work or the books will never get done...
Cheers,
Dana
Tue Sep 16, 2014 8:27 am
Michel Lemieux wrote:Speaking of the original birdcage corsair that was in NZ a few years ago....where is it now?
Tue Sep 16, 2014 12:18 pm
Warbird Kid wrote:Michel Lemieux wrote:Speaking of the original birdcage corsair that was in NZ a few years ago....where is it now?
Sigh…
Tue Sep 16, 2014 12:34 pm
Scooby wrote:Warbird Kid wrote:Michel Lemieux wrote:Speaking of the original birdcage corsair that was in NZ a few years ago....where is it now?
Sigh…
That isn't an original Birdcage. That is an F$U-1A backdated to one. But perhaps the sigh was for that reason.....
There is a Birdcage in Australia being restored:
http://www.classicjets.com/index.html
The only other true Birdcage is the one recovered in Lake Michigan and currently in Pensacola being restored.
Fri Sep 19, 2014 3:52 pm
Dana Bell wrote:Sorry to be late to the dance, but I just came across this question a few minutes ago. I'm new to WIX, but I've been researching Corsairs for a couple of years for two new books, and I can explain what you saw on Marine's Dream.
The Corsair was built to be as light as possible, but this meant the aluminum turn-over structure behind the pilot was prone to collapse whenever the aircraft flipped over on landing. Since ground loops and overturns were common, several pilots died in aircraft with relatively little damage - they could be crushed beneath the aircraft, or the armor plate could tear free and slam against their skulls.
A new, window-free turtleback was needed, but the need for more Corsairs delayed the introduction of that feature to the production line. In the interim, North Island created the fix you see in the Marine's Dream photos: some internal bracing was added, as was an internal hold-back structure for the armor plate, the rear-view windows were removed and replaced with formed aluminum structures, and a piece of heavy-gauge aluminum sheet was fitted to the spine (partially overlapping the rear view window inserts.
The rig was fairly common, but I still would have expected to see far more aircraft modified this way - espicially considering the danger to Corsair pilots in unmodified aircraft.
The armor plate was replaced in a separate change order - the pilot's head was far too exposed to gunfire with the original plate, as was his left arm (on the throttle). The new armor could be added at the same time as the roll-over modification, or later, or even on aircraft without the mod - as one poster here noted, completely blocking the view through the rear vision tunnels.
There are an amazing number of new details turning up on the Corsair - but I'd better get back to work or the books will never get done...
Cheers,
Dana